Re: Restore vs Backup
- From: "Ted Zieglar" <teddy.z@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 2 Feb 2006 11:33:32 -0500
Nero is not a disk imaging application.
You seem to be stuck on doing things your own way. I wish you good luck.
--
Ted Zieglar
"You can do it if you try."
"Pete B" <petebarnes@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:ecadn34JGHA.1728@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Well, I already have imaging software installed, I have Nero (I would nota
use a Norton's product ever again even if you held a gun to my head :=)
They are crap IMO... but that is a topic for another day). I may just try
custom sslection of the folders and data I want, along with the sys statewell....
components; that option seems to provide for making a boot floppy as part
of the task.
In any case, it seems what you are saying is I am out of luck. Oh
It is a shame that MS dropped the ability to easily make an emergencyrescue
disk like we used to be able to do with earlier versions. Even that piecehttp://www.symantec.com/home_homeoffice/products/backup_recovery/ghost10/index.html
of OS art known as Windows 98 SE had that function.
I probably will never need it, it is just something that, until now, I
always maintained. BTW this is for my new PC for my home business, not a
network machine; making images is not as easy a task on a single machine
stand-alone system as it is on a work station, but Nero can do it.
--
Pete B
"Ted Zieglar" <teddy.z@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:eus6nA3JGHA.2336@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Your goal is best achieved with disk imaging software. Some popular
choices
(no order is intended):
Norton Ghost 10
is
Acronis True Image 9
http://www.acronis.com/homecomputing/products/trueimage/
Image for Windows http://www.terabyteunlimited.com/imagew.html
--
Ted Zieglar
"You can do it if you try."
"Pete B" <petebarnes@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:e4K5Xo2JGHA.3728@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
OK thanks. Maybe I am not being specific enough as to what my purpose
toin
all this, it is pretty simple. I want to, essentially, back up my PC
upthe
point where, if it totally crashes, say with a BSD when I try to boot
saysthat will not let me boot up. I want to be able to do an emergency bootfrom
a floppy or bootable CD and then restore my system to whatever state I
had
in that backup. I want to back up all my data files and all the files
and
info that WinXP needs to get me back to the state I was in when I made
the
backup, so I can recover from the crash.
Backup wizard gives me an option to save all files and info which it
whatit
will follow the save by then creating a boot floppy, but that is not
doI
want because it tries to save everything on the HDD. I don't need to
Orthat, I just need to save the dynamic personal data and the Windowsrecovery
stuff. If I lose the software apps itself, it will be a pain but I can30GB
always go back and reinstall all of those, so I don't need to save that
of files for the programs themselves and such.
I can do the Backup Advanced, where I select manually, and select the
Automated Sys Rec Wizard but that tries to save the whole partition.
WindowsIsystem
can select the Backup tab and individually select the folders and the
state components, but does that follow with a boot floppy creation if Istill
do
it? Seems to me that would let me select exactly what to save, but I
may not be getting all that I need to recover from a failure.
It was easier in the old versions of Windows, you could just tell
http://www.microsoft.com/technet/prodtechnol/winxppro/reskit/c14621675.mspx#EFAASetup to create a bootable CD and it would do the rest. This XP methoda
seems highly complicated. That is really my whole goal here. So what
should I do?
And I surely wish MS would make the Backup util so it would save direct
to
DVD-R or DVD-RW drive.....
--
Pete B
"Bert Kinney" <bert@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:%232mp$TtJGHA.648@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Hi Pete,
<Snip from the following article>
System State data includes the following:
Boot files, including the system files
Files protected by Windows File Protection (WFP)
The registry
Performance counter configuration information
The Component Services class registration database
Windows XP Resource Kit: Backing Up and Restoring Data
(hklm->system->controlset001->control->backuprestore->filesnottobackuplist
What's restored and what's not using System Restore:
* Restored
Registry (note: some current values will persist)
Profiles (local only—roaming user profiles not impacted by
restore)
COM+ DB
WFP.dll cache
WMI DB
IIS Metabase
Files with extensions listed in the Monitored File Extensions
restored)* Not Restored
DRM settings
SAM hives (does not restore passwords)
WPA settings (Windows authentication information is not
ExtensionsContents of the My Documents folder(s)
Specific directories/files listed in the Monitored File
list
Any file with an extension not listed in the Monitored File
Extensions list
Items listed in both Filesnottobackup and KeysnottoRestore
means).and
keysnottorestore)
User-created data stored in the user profile
Contents of redirected folders
--
Regards,
Bert Kinney MS-MVP Shell/User
http://bertk.mvps.org
Pete B wrote:
Thanks, Ted. What I specifically was wondering about, though,is
backup of the system state components in Backup, not the whole
Windows installation (or is that what system state components
ofBacking up my whole Windows installation would, I presume, require a
lot more than just the system state components, right?
What specifically is included or not included in that group called
sytem state components in Backup? Are there other things that are
saved/restored with the System Restore util that would not be part
Restorehttp://www.microsoft.com/technet/prodtechnol/winxppro/plan/faqsrwxp.mspxthat selection? Understand I am talking about doing a custom Backup,
where you select exactly what is backed up; one of the selections
under advanced mode is the system state components.
Of course, I suppose I might find some of the answers by reading the
technet article :=).
Which I just did. But I am still not clear what the difference is
between Backup and Sys Restore in this respect. Is it better to use
System Restore or Backup before, say, installing a new software app
that one does not know all that well?
"Ted Zieglar" <teddy.z@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:efzmGrdJGHA.964@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Good question. When you backup your entire system, you include your
entire Windows installation. A restore point only contains the
registry and certain
key system and user files.
"Frequently Asked Questions Regarding System Restore in Windows XP"
--
Ted Zieglar
"You can do it if you try."
"Pete B" <petebarnes@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:%23yE%233TdJGHA.312@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
What is the difference in WinXP Pro between saving a System
usepoint,
as compared to saving a system backup using the Backup utility to
save the
system state components? Other than the preference of Backup to
external storage media, I mean....
Is there any KB article or Tech info that describes exactly what
each utility does in detail like this?
Thanks
--
Pete B
.
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